Sweet Potatoes
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Sweet Potatoes
© Denzil Green
There is a lot of confusion between what is a Sweet Potato and what is a Yam. Unless what you're buying in your supermarket is canned and says "Yams", or is a big, big chunk of root cut off of a bigger root and wrapped in plastic, then what you're buying is a Sweet Potato, no matter what the sign posted on the vegetable counter says.
Sweet Potatoes aren't actually even related to Yams. Sweet Potatoes aren't actually related to potatoes, for that matter. Potatoes are tubers of a plant, whereas Sweet Potatoes are engorged storage roots. You can grow potatoes by cutting out and planting a portion that has an "eye" (bud) in it. Sweet Potatoes never produce "eyes." They will sprout if you put one in a glass of water, but won't do much of anything other than moulder away if you bury one in the ground.
Sweet Potatoes, however, are shaped like potatoes, and are about the same size, but instead of rounded ends, their ends will often be slightly or very tapered. The skin is pretty much tan-coloured, though sometimes this will range to pinkish or coppery. Some will have white flesh inside, some will have purply flesh, but most often the ones that have yellow or orange flesh are preferred as this indicates the presence of carotene (which the body can convert to vitamin A as needed.) Sweet Potatoes thrive in hot, moist climates.
Sweet Potatoes are usually cured after harvesting. The curing involves being stored for about 5 days at 85 F (30 C); this dries them out a bit, to preserve their storage life, and converts some of the starch to sugar, making them sweeter.
Historically, people in the southern United States have preferred varieties which are "moist-fleshed" and orange inside, which they often call (erroneously) call Yams. In the Northern States, Canada and the UK, people have preferred the paler yellow "dry-flesh" ones. This may have been largely owing to which varieties grew better where. The lighter-fleshed ones do better in shorter growing seasons. [1] [2] Consumer preference changed somewhat in the late 1900s as the orange-fleshed ones became widely available owing to mass shipping from the American south, and to growing trials in northern areas to develop orange-fleshed ones suitable for the growing seasons there.
In the southern states, though, Sweet Potatoes are also used as livestock feed, something that northerners wouldn't do owing to the premium they still fetch at markets.
Sweet Potatoes are still generally regarded as a festive food for holidays, though Sweet Potato growers are doing their best to make consumers think of them as do people in the southern United States, for whom they are more of an everyday staple.
When buying Sweet Potatoes, don't pay much attention to the appearance of the skin (unless the poor thing has huge bruises or open running sores.) Don't buy any, though, that have blotchy white areas; they have probably been damaged and are decaying. To pick a good one, heft it in your hand, and see that it feels heavy for its size.
Sweet Potatoes contain apparently more vitamin A than any other vegetable.
1 cup mashed, plain = 325g = 11 1/2 oz by weight
Freezing: Wash. Boil, bake, steam or microwave until just about tender. Let stand until cool. Peel. Then mash, slice, or chop into chunks. Package and freeze. Optional: drizzle and toss cooked sweet potato with a small amount of lemon juice before freezing to prevent any darkening.
They were being grown in Virginia in the early half of the 1600s, and by 1764 were being grown in New England. People in Virginia were so fond of Sweet Potatoes, that in the mid 1800s they were served for dessert.
[2] Of the large number of varieties of the sweet potato there are not more than ten that are now of great commercial importance in the United States. For the markets that require a dry, mealy-fleshed potato those varieties belonging to the Jersey group are suitable. For the Southern trade and where a moist-fleshed potato is desired those commonly designated as yams are in demand. Among the Jerseys that are extensively grown are the Big-Stem Jersey, the Yellow Jersey, and the Red Jersey. The principal varieties of the yam group are the Southern Queen, the Pumpkin Yam, the Georgia, the Florida, and the Red Bermuda. Of the varieties mentioned there are a large number of special strains known under many local names. In the selection of varieties for home use one must be governed largely by locality. As a rule those of the Jersey group will thrive farther north than those of the so-called yam types." -- Grubb, Eugene H. and W.S. Guilford. "The Sweet Potato. Part 3". In: The Potato: A Compilation of Information from Every Available Source. Doubleday, Page & Company. 1912.
"In North America, sweet potato is commercially grown in southern states of USA, particularly North Carolina and Louisiana....In Canada, sweet potato is grown commercially in Ontario, Quebec and in recent years is making in-roads in Maritime farms and gardens. Depending upon the sweet potato variety, of which there are about 400, its flesh may be white, yellow or orange and its thin skin may be white, yellow, orange, red or purple. Sometimes this root vegetable will be shaped like a potato, being short and blocky with rounded ends, while other times it will be longer with tapered ends. Though orange flesh/orange skin varieties are most common in [the] Maritimes, purple skin/orange flesh and white skin/white flesh varieties are becoming available through regional grocery retailers and farm markets." -- Canada: Growing sweet potatoes in the Maritimes. Halifax, Nova Scotia. Atlantic Farm focus Magazine. 8 June 2007.
North Carolina Sweet Potato Commission. Commercial Growing Information. Section 1: Choosing a Variety. Retrieved December 2009 from http://www.ncsweetpotatoes.com/component/content/64.html?task=view
Sweet Potatoes: Easy to Grow, Good to Eat. Ottawa, Canada: Farm Radio International. Package 32, Script 1. April 1994.
See Also: Yams
Other entries for: Sweet Potatoes
Japanese Yams, Okinawan Sweet Potatoes, Yaki-Imo
Other entries for: Potatoes
AC Glacier Chip Potatoes, Aida Potatoes, Alamo Potatoes, Alasclear Potatoes, Alaska Red-Eye Potatoes, Alaska Russet Potatoes, Alaska Sweetheart Potatoes, Albas Potatoes, All-Purpose Potatoes, Allegheny Mountain Potatoes, Allehanna Potatoes, Alta Russet Potatoes, Amorosa Potatoes, Amyla Potatoes, Anita Potatoes, Antigo Potatoes, Arenac Potatoes, Arran Banner Potatoes, Arran Comet Potatoes, Ashworth Potatoes, Avon Potatoes, Beauty of Hebron Potatoes, Berita Potatoes, Black Potatoes, Bounty Potatoes, Bovee Potatoes, Burbank Potatoes, Calgold Potatoes, Calrose Potatoes, Canary Island Potatoes, Canus Potatoes, Cariboo Potatoes, Caruso Potatoes, Chenango Potatoes, Chinook Potatoes, Chisago Potatoes, Conchita Potatoes, Creamer Potatoes, Crushed Potatoes, Dazoc Potatoes, Delus Potatoes, DeSota Potatoes, Donna Potatoes, Earlaine Potatoes, Early Gem Potatoes, Early Rose Potatoes, Eide Russet Potatoes, Empire Potatoes, Erendira Potatoes, Erie Potatoes, Erli-Red Potatoes, Essex Potatoes, Fillmore Potatoes, Fingerling Potatoes, Floury Potatoes, Glenmeer Potatoes, Golf Potatoes, Grelot Potatoes, Industrial Potatoes, Instant Mashed Potato Flakes, Irish Peace Potatoes, Irish Queen Potatoes, Jersey Redskin Potatoes, K N I K Potatoes, Kasota Potatoes, Lake Potatoes, Langworthy Potatoes, Madison Potatoes, Manota Potatoes, Marygold Potatoes, Mason Potatoes, Maverick Potatoes, Mazama Potatoes, McCormick Potatoes, Merrimack Potatoes, Mesaba Potatoes, Michibonne Potatoes, Michigami Potatoes, Michimac Potatoes, Miranda Potatoes, Mohawk Potatoes, Myatt's Ash-Leaf Kidney Potatoes, Oneida Potatoes, Ontario Potatoes, Osage Potatoes, Osseo Potatoes, Pele Potatoes, Pennigan Potatoes, Potato Chips, Red Warba Potatoes, Redburt Potatoes, Redglo Potatoes, Redkote Potatoes, Reliance Potatoes, Sassy Potatoes, Satapa Potatoes, Seresta Potatoes, Shamrock Potatoes, Snowdrift Potatoes, St Louis Potatoes, Starch Potatoes, Sylvia Potatoes, Tawa Potatoes, Thome Black Potatoes, Ulster Tara Potatoes, Ute Russet Potatoes, Valisa Potatoes, Virgil Potatoes, Waimea Potatoes, Ware Potatoes, Waxy Potatoes, White Cloud Potatoes, White Gold Potatoes, Yankee Chipper Potatoes, York Potatoes, Yorkshire Hero Potatoes, Zahov Potatoes
Other entries for: Root Vegetables
Añú, Beet, Carrots, Cassava, Celery Root, Crosne, Garlic, Horseradish, Jerusalem Artichokes, Jicama, Konjac Root, Malanga, Oca, Onions, Parsnips, Prairie Turnip, Radishes, Rutabaga, Salsify, Scorzonera, Sea Holly, Swede, Taro, Turnips, Water Chestnuts, Yacon, Yamagoboo, Yams
Other entries for: Vegetables
Agave, Artichokes, Asparagus, Brassica Family, Canned Vegetables, Cardoons, Celery, Corn, Cucumbers, Eggplant, Frozen Vegetables, Gourds, Horseradish Tree, Leafy Vegetables, Lotus, Mixed Vegetables, Mushrooms, Pak Wan, Peas, Peppers, Sago Palm, Seaweed, Spinach, Sprouts, Squash, Tomatoes, Viscous Vegetables
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